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The Mountain Hare is still slaughtered in large numbers on grouse moors; gas guns are still used near nesting birds; and there was another mass shooting of nesting Lesser Black-Backed Gulls on a Lancashire grouse moor (Abbeystead Estate). Grouse shooting for 'sport' depends on intensive habitat management, such as heather burning, which increases flood risk and greenhouse gas emissions, and the widespread and unregulated use of toxic chemicals to ‘control pests’ on Red Grouse.

Stink pits, snares and various traps litter grouse moors -
gamekeepers set these traps to kill our upland predators, just so
there are more Red Grouse to shoot. Many ‘by-catch’ victims have been found in
traps on grouse moors, including Mountain Hares, Badgers, Deer, Cats, Water
Vole, Red Squirrel, Pine Martins, Dippers, Ring Ousel and Red Grouse.

Much of the game shooting industry are
still in complete denial about the scale of raptor persecution and other
wildlife crimes on grouse moors, and argue that licensing would be an
unnecessary and unwelcome ‘threat’. Enough is enough. We think grouse shooting
is economically, ecologically and socially unnecessary, and that a driven
grouse shooting ban is the only way forward for upland reforms.

A NEW petition to ban driven grouse shooting has been
launched. You can sign it here: SIGN PETITION.